Feb 4, 2015

Playlists for The Grown Ups

Just
for Fun: Playlists for The Grown Ups

When I write, if I’m
really lucky, I’m really just transcribing this big movie in my head that
unrolls and plays on a loop until I put it on paper. That’s the only way I can
describe what happens when I’ve really fallen into the story with a group of
characters all clamoring to be heard. The songs I picked for Sam maps out his
emotional territory—and add to his life as only a great soundtrack can enhance
a movie and sweep you right back into the moment.

Sam
Turner

Lenny
Bruce, the Historic 1962 Concert When Lenny Was Busted

West
Side Story, Original Cast Soundtrack

Mr.
Ed: Straight from the Horse’s Mouth,

Mike
Stewart and The Stable Hands

At fifteen Sam’s world is
his friends and not much else. A lot of his free time is spent in the basement
of his friend Peter Chang’s house, where the boys hang to play video games, get
drunk, and listen to a few albums belonging to Peter Chang’s mother on an
old-school stereo cabinet. The diversity of these albums is absurd, but that’s
half the fun.

“Your
Body Is a Wonderland,” John Mayer

Sam and Suzie Epstein do
some exploring in her basement at fifteen, and later, Sam and Bella Spade begin
a relationship while seniors in high school. Sam’s desire for Bella combined
with a refusal to define their relationship leaves them loosely attached
through the next few years.

“My
Father’s House,” Bruce Springsteen

Sam’s father falls in love
with Marguerite, and they embark on a massive renovation of Sam’s childhood
home. During this time Sam’s father, Hunt, suffers a massive coronary and needs
emergency surgery.

“You
Can’t Always Get What You Want,”

The
Rolling Stones

“You’re
Gonna Miss Me,” 13th Floor Elevators

Sam’s brother, Michael, is
dating Suzie Epstein, Sam’s first crush. It doesn’t help that in Sam’s eyes
Michael always seems to get what he wants. These two songs encapsulate Sam’s
feelings from the time he finds out they are dating right up through their
engagement and wedding.

“All
Day and All of the Night,” The Kinks

“Till
the End of the Day,” The Kinks

Drifting from job to job,
in a perpetual state of dissatisfaction, Sam takes Peter Chang up on the offer
of a week out on the Cape with their friends. To his dismay Bella arrives with
her boyfriend, Ted. It’s during this trip that Sam eventually concedes that
Bella is his one true love. So he pines his way through the week.The pounding
punk tunes of the Kinks seem just about right for the chaos that is the state
of Sam’s brain.

“The
Weight,” The Band

With its religious
allusions to Nazareth, and the offer to “take a load off,” this song seems just
about right for Sam, who leaves yet another job, retreats to his childhood home
again, adrift, tries to reconcile his less than stellar life so far to that of
his cardiologist brother, only to discover that home is not what it used to be.
His father is struggling. Sam’s attempts to explain his feelings to Bella are
rebuffed. Some serious soul-searching is going on here.

“Come
As You Are,” Nirvana

This message of acceptance
should be Sam’s anthem by the time he figures it all out. His opening of a
restaurant coincides with the birth of Suzie and Michael’s son, Leo.

“Feels
Like the First Time,” Foreigner

This is a fairly corny
song, but it’s one of those recognizable rock anthems that work. If you’ve
traveled with Sam down his winding path to figuring it all out, this song makes
a lot of sense by the end of the book.